Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Kissmetrics How to Get Noticed

from blog.kissmetrics.com

How to Get Your New Website or Blog Discovered

So how can you get your new website discovered by the Googlebot? Here are some great ways. The best part is that some of the following will help you get referral traffic to your new website too!
  • Create a Sitemap – A sitemap is an XML document on your website’s server that basically lists each page on your website. It tells search engines when new pages have been added and how often to check back for changes on specific pages. For example, you might want a search engine to come back and check your homepage daily for new products, news items, and other new content. If your website is built on WordPress, you can install the Google XML Sitemaps plugin and have it automatically create and update your sitemap for you as well as submit it to search engines. You can also use tools such as the XML Sitemaps Generator.
  • Submit Sitemap to Google Webmaster Tools – The first place you should take your sitemap for a new website is Google Webmaster Tools. If you don’t already have one, simply create a free Google Account, then sign up for Webmaster Tools. Add your new site to Webmaster Tools, then go to Optimization > Sitemaps and add the link to your website’s sitemap to Webmaster Tools to notify Google about it and the pages you have already published. For extra credit, create an account with Bing and submit your sitemap to them via their Webmaster Tools.
  • Install Google Analytics – You’ll want to do this for tracking purposes regardless, but it certainly might give Google the heads up that a new website is on the horizon.
  • Submit Website URL to Search Engines – Some people suggest that you don’t do this simply because there are many other ways to get a search engine’s crawler to your website. But it only takes a moment, and it certainly doesn’t hurt things. So submit your website URL to Google by signing into your Google Account and going to the Submit URL option in Webmaster Tools. For extra credit, submit your site to Bing. You can use the anonymous tool to submit URL’s below the Webmaster Tools Sign In – this will also submit it to Yahoo.
  • Create or Update Social Profiles – As mentioned previously, crawlers get to your site via links. One way to get some quick links is by creating social networking profiles for your new website or adding a link to your new website to pre-existing profiles. This includes Twitter profiles, Facebook pages, Google+ profiles or pages, LinkedIn profiles or company pages, Pinterest profiles, and YouTube channels.
  • Share Your New Website Link – Once you have added your new website link to a new or pre-existing social profile, share it in a status update on those networks. While these links are nofollow, they will still alert search engines that are tracking social signals. For Pinterest, pin an image from the website and for YouTube, create a video introducing your new website and include a link to it in the video’s description.
  • Bookmark It – Use quality social bookmarking sites like Delicious andStumbleUpon.
  • Create Offsite Content – Again, to help in the link building process, get some more links to your new website by creating offsite content such as submitting guest posts to blogs in your niche, articles to quality article directories, and press releases to services that offer SEO optimization and distribution. Please note this is about quality content from quality sites – you don’t want spammy content from spammy sites because that just tells Google that your website is spammy.

How to Get Your New Blog Discovered

So what if your new website is a blog? Then in additional to all of the above options, you can also do the following to help get it found by Google.
  • Setup Your RSS with Feedburner – Feedburner is Google’s own RSS management tool. Sign up or in to your Google account and submit your feed with Feedburner by copying your blog’s URL or RSS feed URL into the “Burn a feed” field. In addition to your sitemap, this will also notify Google of your new blog and each time that your blog is updated with a new post.
  • Submit to Blog Directories – TopRank has a huge list of sites you can submit your RSS feed and blog to. This will help you build even more incoming links. If you aren’t ready to do them all, at least start with Technorati as it is one of the top blog directories. Once you have a good amount of content, also tryAlltop.

The Results

Once your website or blog is indexed, you’ll start to see more traffic from Google search. Plus, getting your new content discovered will happen faster if you have set up sitemaps or have a RSS feed. The best way to ensure that your new content is discovered quickly is simply by sharing it on social media networks through status updates, especially on Google+.
Also remember that blog content is generally crawled and indexed much faster than regular pages on a static website, so consider having a blog that supports your website. For example, if you have a new product page, write a blog post about it and link to the product page in your blog post. This will help the product page get found much faster by the Googlebot!

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Lumpy User Behavior - another one found by Paul

(Link at bottom)

During preparations for our new training course onAnalytics and User Experience, I discovered recent research that invalidates many simplistic approaches to website metrics. I’m ashamed to admit that it took me two years to appreciate these results, but the papers were written by economists that I normally don’t follow.

Even though this research was done by economists and not usability people, it’s the most important new insight into web user behaviorsince information foraging and information scent.

The basic finding is that users’ behavior is much lumpier than previously recognized: for any given user, periods of unusually high Internet activityalternate with periods of low activity.

So, once again, this means that you can’t conclude that exposure to a specific stimulus causes a certain behavior, even if you observe increased occurrences of this behavior after the exposure. As I’ve always said, correlation doesn’t prove causation because hidden covariants might exist. We now know that user activity bias is one such covariant — and that it’s very strong.

Do Promo Videos Make People Visit Websites?

At Yahoo, Randall A. Lewis and his colleagues ran an experiment in which they asked visitors to Amazon’s Mechanical Turk service to watch a promotional video for Yahoo. The following chart shows whether these users visited any of the sites within the Yahoo network on the day they watched the video, as well as during the two weeks before and after their video exposure.

Users visiting a site before and after watching a promotional video for that site as well as a control group taht watched an unrelated video. Chart replotted after data published in Lewis et al. (2011).
Chart replotted after data published in Lewis et al. (see references below).

The chart’s heavy blue line shows the behavior over time of users who watched a promotional video for Yahoo while visiting Amazon Mechanical Turk. Day 0 is the day the users saw the video; clearly, they were dramatically more likely to visit Yahoo on that day.

Given the users’ average behavior during the previous two weeks, the data shows a fabulous lift of 144% in their Yahoo visits on the day they saw a promotional video for this site. Even better, the impact of the video stays with users for some time: there’s a more modest 43% increase in user visits the following day (Day +1).

A naïve reader of such an analytics report would now conclude that this promotional video was a superb marketing tool. Clearly, the company should invest heavily in showing this video more widely.

Not so fast. Close inspection of the chart also shows a lift in visits on the last few days beforeusers watched the promotional video. On Day -1, there was a 36% lift in Yahoo visits. How can that be? Unless you believe in time travel, how can a promotional video make users visit a site before they’ve seen that video?

Even worse, look at the chart’s thin orange line. This line shows the behavior of users who visited Amazon’s Mechanical Turk service but wereshown an unrelated video that didn’t mention Yahoo. As the chart shows, these users had essentially the same behavior pattern as users who saw the promo video.

So, on the day the control group watched the unrelated video, they, too, experienced a huge lift in their desire to visit Yahoo. And these extra Yahoo visits also persisted for some time.

It strains belief to think that a video that never mentioned Yahoo would have enhanced viewers’ impressions of the Yahoo brand. Clearly, watching the unrelated video didn’t cause the Yahoo site visits; given that the two videos had essentially the same effect, we can conclude that the promotional video didn’t motivate the Yahoo visits either.

And yet, Yahoo visits rose dramatically. If this wasn’t because of the promotional video, what caused the extra visits? Users in both the stimulus and control groups were simply more active on the Internet the day they watched the videos.

This phenomenon is called activity biassome days, people do a lot online; other days, they do very little.

On very active days, people are more likely to do both Activity A and Activity B, no matter what A or B might be. (In this experiment, “A” was visiting Mechanical Turk to watch a video and “B” was visiting Yahoo.)

Crucially, even if there is no relationship between A and B, the very fact that you observe users doing A means that they are likely to be having one of their more active days and therefore are also more likely to do B.

Do Search Ads Make People Buy?

Thomas Blake and his colleagues at eBay further illustrated the activity bias effect in their experiments with search engine advertising on Google and Bing.

Before the experiments, eBay had run a broad variety of search ads and recorded both good clickthrough rates and significant sales to users who clicked the ads. Does this make the ads worth running? Not necessarily.

Now that we know about activity bias, we recognize that the very fact that users clicked on eBay advertisements means that those users were probably having one of their high-activity days. (On low-activity days, people search less and click fewer ads.) On a high-activity day, users would also be more likely to buy stuff on eBay.

Thus, just because ad clicks and product purchases happened on the same day doesn’t mean that the ad caused the sale. It’s also possible that both events were caused by users having a particularly active day and doing a lot on the web.

As a first experiment, Blake et al. simply switched off all advertising for branded keywords on Google and Bing. (Branded searches are those where a user’s query includes the name of the company or one of its brands — such as a search for “eBay shoes” instead of simply “shoes” or “buy shoes.”)

Although visits driven by ads obviously stopped, people still kept coming to eBay. The authors’ analysis shows that only 0.5% of the expected clicks from branded search ads on Bing were lost, whereas 3% of the Google clicks were lost. In either case, the vast majority of those users who would have clicked an ad still arrived at eBay through other means, usually by clicking an organic search result.

Remember, these were branded searches; users had already decided to consider eBay, as evidenced by the fact that they included the company name in their queries. So, not surprisingly, it’s a waste of money to advertise further to people who have already decided to visit the website.

(I believe that some companies run branded search ads to reduce the number of ads that people see from competitors, who might divert prospective customers at the last minute. However, this is a very expensive way of suppressing the competition that might not be worth it for companies with a decent brand reputation. If people have decided they want to check your offers, they’re unlikely to be diverted by other companies’ ads.)

In a second more elaborate study, Blake et al. tested the effectiveness of non-branded keyword advertising. In this case, they stopped the search ads in 65 randomly chosen U.S. metropolitan areas. They matched these geographical regions with others as closely as possible to create a set of 68 control metropolitan areas in which search advertising continued as usual. In total, the authors estimate that the paid search advertising added 0.4% to sales and that the return on investment was so close to zero as to be statistically insignificant.

This is not to say that only 0.4% of sales were to people who had clicked search ads; sales to ad clickers were much higher (though eBay keeps the actual number secret). The key point, however, is that many of these sales would have occurred even without the ad. In those regions where the search ads were run, many users clicked the ads because it was easy and they were right in front of them. Users are lazy, as we know from countless usability studies. This drove up the “attributed sales” for the ads. But in those regions where no ads ran, users reached the site in other ways and made an almost equal number of purchases.

In an additional analysis, the authors considered whether people buying on eBay had made a purchase there during the previous year. For people who hadn’t made a purchase during that period, the search ads increased sales by much more than the general estimate. For people who had made one or two purchases during the past year, there was also a small sales lift from the search ads. But, for customers who had made three or more purchases in the past year, the sales lift from search ads was statistically too close to zero to be significant.

This finding matches the branded keyword study’s result: the benefit of search ads comes from exposure to customers who don’t know you or don’t remember you. People who know the brand are less likely to be swayed by such advertising.

The key lesson from this study? Activity bias comes back to haunt marketing managers who run simplistic analyses of “attributed sales” to advertising, assuming that sales are caused by whatever happened to be the user’s last click. Many users who both click ads and make purchases would have done the latter even if they hadn’t seen an ad. A controlled experiment is the only way to discover an ad’s true impact.

Why Does Activity Bias Exist?

Several different experiments have found strong evidence of activity bias that was so prominent that it greatly distorted the conclusion one would draw from a simplistic view of website analytics.

Why is activity bias so pronounced in user behavior? We don’t know; further research is needed. However, I can certainly speculate. Here are some possible reasons for activity bias:

•  Some days, people have plenty of time to kill on the computer. Other days, they might be on vacation or a business trip, have a looming deadline, or have other reasons to minimize their time online.

•  Being on the computer can be captivatingin its own right. You sit down to check one thing, and by the time you look up, an hour has passed and you’ve visited twenty other websites. One thing leads to another. Other times, you need to check one thing and then immediately go discuss it with your boss. You never get time to be pulled into the mesmerizing realm of the web.

•  Sometimes, external factors — such as writing a research paper or planning a vacation — drive people to heavy web use.

•  People’s moods impact web use; in a good mood, users might be happy with a user experience that might otherwise disgust them and lead them to turn off the online world.

•  Real world events drive or hinder Internet use. Anything from network outages (zero use) to hurricanes (heavy use while people are cooped up, assuming they can connect).

As I said, the reasons here are speculation. What we do know is that activity bias is real, and users’ online behavior is lumpy. We should recognize this, take advantage of it in our designs when possible, and definitely control for it when we use analytics data.

References

Thomas Blake, Chris Nosko, and Steven Tadelis: “Consumer heterogeneity and paid search effectiveness: A large scale field experiment,”National Bureau of Economic Research, Meeting on the Economics of Digitization (March 8, 2013).

Randall A. Lewis, Justin M. Rao, and David H. Reiley: “Here, there, and everywhere: Correlated online behaviors can lead to overestimates of the effects of advertising,” Proceedings International World Wide Web Conference WWW 2011 (March 28–April 1, 2011, Hyderabad, India).

http://www.nngroup.com/articles/internet-activity-bias/

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Time to leave Adobe behind

We are officially recommending our clients begin migrating away from Adobe, particularly with the loss of their core source code; it will take years for them to secure their products.  Here is a great set of alternatives by PC World's Brad Chacos.  (see also or TechTips page for download links).

Another day, another critical security exploit discovered for Adobe Reader. Ho-hum. The PDF software's near-ubiquitous presence has made it a big, fat, juicy target for years now, and by this point, you shouldn't be asking what Adobe's going to do to shore up its perpetually leaky program. Instead, you should ask yourself: Why are you still using Adobe Reader at all?

Believe it or not, the PDF viewer scene is bristling with a number of alternatives that receive far less nefarious attention than Adobe's software. Switching away from Reader won't only free you from the tiresome exploit-update-exploit-update-exploit treadmill, it could very well free up some of your valuable system resources. Adobe Reader's so big and bloated that even its most feature-packed competitors seem downright svelte in comparison.

Without further ado, here's a trio of PCWorld tested—and approved!—PDF readers that can free you from Reader's headaches, no matter whether you're looking for a simple, lightweight PDF viewer or a more robust PDF editing and creation tool.

The contenders
Sumatra PDF. If you just want the ability to open PDFs and don't care about bells and whistles, Sumatra PDF is an excellent choice. The program's pretty much limited to straightforward PDF viewing, but it's lightning-fast and uses very few system resources.

Foxit Reader. Foxit Reader's not quite as fast or resource-friendly as Sumatra PDF, but it's still incredibly lightweight, and it packs a few features you won't find in Sumatra; namely, PDF-to-speech functionality, the ability to fill out fields and add text to PDFs, and optional integration with the DocuSign service.

Nitro PDF Reader. The final PDF reader of the bunch opens files slower than the other two options, but makes up for its somewhat pokey performance with a deep feature list—and it's still the equivalent of an Olympic sprinter compared to Adobe Reader's downright sluggish speeds. The free version of Nitro Reader can print (read: convert) virtually any document to a PDF, comes packed with collaboration, creation, and editing tools, and lets you embed your signature into any PDF. That's just the tip of the ice berg, and even better, Nitro PDF Reader dumps nary a watermark on your documents—a rarity amongst free PDF creation tools.

Don't stop with Reader!

Java is another frequently exploited platform.
Once you've gone ahead left Adobe Reader in the rearview mirror, you can plug another persistent security hole by uninstalling Java (unless, of course, you have a compelling reason otherwise). There's no real alternative available for Adobe Flash— the final troublesome cornerstone in the triumvirate of hackers' favorite third-party targets—but the technology has lost some of its luster thanks to the rapid rise of HTML5. Adobe has already pulled the plug on Flash for smartphones and Linux PCs.

Internet Explorer is another frequent target for exploits. Combat that danger by keeping Windows Updates set to "Automatic," or better yet, try an alternative browser like Mozilla's Firefox or Google Chrome.